By Eric Vandenbroeck and co-workers
Time To Step Back From The Brink
While Forces
said Saturday it was preparing to implement “a wide range of offensive operative
plans,” including “an integrated and coordinated attack from the air, sea and
land.”
It is time to use
strength and stop Israel from creating a remarkable disaster. Washington’s
current approach is encouraging Israel to launch a profoundly misbegotten war,
promising protection from its consequences by deterring others from entering
the battle and by blocking any efforts at imposing accountability through
international law. It's time to stop Israel from creating a disaster.
The Israeli military
is preparing ‘significant ground operations,’ as the US defense secretary
orders the USS Eisenhower to the Mediterranean.
While we earlier (written on 9 October) argued Iran likely played a role in helping plot
the latest Hamas attacks. Like its Hezbollah proxy,
Iran sees Israel as fundamentally illegitimate.
Then, in the early
morning of October 13, the Israeli military warned the 1.2 million Palestinians
of northern Gaza that they must evacuate within 24 hours before a probable
ground invasion. Such an Israeli assault would end Hamas
as an organization in retaliation for its shocking October 7 surprise
attack into southern Israel, where it massacred over 1,000 Israeli citizens and
seized over a hundred hostages.
We know that this is
happening mainly because of the prospect of the U.S.-Saudi-Israeli deal. Hamas
understands this is a huge transformative event, and they are trying to create
a circumstance where it will be difficult for Saudi Arabia to do it right.
Nevertheless, it is time to stop Israel from creating a disaster.
An Israeli ground
campaign has seemed inevitable from the moment Hamas breached the security
perimeter surrounding the Gaza Strip. Washington has fully backed Israeli
plans, notably refraining from urging restraint. In an overheated political
environment, the loudest voices in the United States have been those suggesting
extreme measures against Hamas. In some cases, commentators have even called
for military action against Iran for its alleged sponsorship of Hamas’s
operation.
But this is precisely
when Washington must be the cooler head and save Israel from itself. The
impending invasion of Gaza will be a humanitarian, moral, and strategic
catastrophe. It will severely harm Israel’s long-term security, inflict
unfathomable human costs on Palestinians, and threaten core U.S. interests in
the Middle East, Ukraine, and Washington’s competition with China over the
Indo-Pacific order. Only the Biden administration—channeling the United States’
unique leverage and the White House’s demonstrated close support for Israeli
security—can now stop Israel from making a disastrous mistake. Now that it has
shown its sympathy with Israel, Washington must pivot toward demanding that its
ally fully comply with the laws of war. It must insist that Israel find ways to
take the fight to Hamas that do not entail the displacement and mass killing of
innocent Palestinian civilians.
Jordan’s King
Abdullah II and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken Discuss Gaza Aid and
Conflict De-escalation
Unsteady State
The Hamas attack upended
the set of assumptions that have defined the status quo between Israel and Gaza
of nearly two decades. 2005, Israel withdrew from the Gaza Strip unilaterally
but did not end its de facto occupation. It retained full control over Gaza’s
borders and airspace. It continued exercising tight control (in close
cooperation with Egypt) from outside the security perimeter over the movement
of Gaza’s people, goods, electricity, and money. Hamas assumed power in 2006
following its victory in legislative elections, and it consolidated its grip in
2007 after a failed U.S.-backed effort to replace the group with the
Palestinian Authority.
Since 2007, Israel
and Hamas have maintained an uneasy arrangement. Israel keeps up a stifling
blockade over Gaza, severely restricting the territory’s economy and imposing
great human costs while empowering Hamas by diverting all economic activity to
the tunnels and black markets it controls. During the episodic outbreaks of
conflict—in 2008, 2014, and again in 2021—Israel massively bombarded the
densely populated Gazan urban centers, destroying infrastructure and killing
thousands of civilians while degrading Hamas’s military capabilities and
establishing the price to be paid for provocations. All of this did little to
loosen Hamas’s grip on power.
Israeli leaders had
come to think that this equilibrium could last indefinitely. They believed that
Hamas had learned the lessons of past adventurism through Israel’s massively
disproportionate military responses. Hamas was now content to maintain its rule
in Gaza even if that meant controlling the provocations of more minor militant
factions, such as Palestinian Islamic Jihad. The difficulties the Israeli
Defense Forces (IDF) experienced in a brief ground offensive in 2014 tempered
its ambitions to attempt more. Israeli officials waved off perennial complaints
about the humanitarian effects of the blockade. Instead, the country was
content to keep Gaza on the back burner while accelerating its increasingly
provocative moves to expand its settlements and control over the West Bank.
Hamas had other
ideas. Although many analysts attributed its shifting strategy to Iranian
influence, Hamas had reasons to change its behavior and attack Israel. Its 2018
gambit to challenge the blockade through mass nonviolent mobilization—popularly
known as the “Great March of Return”—ended with massive bloodshed as Israeli
soldiers opened fire on the protesters. In 2021, by contrast, Hamas leaders
believed that they scored significant political gains with the broader
Palestinian public by firing missiles at Israel during intense clashes in
Jerusalem over Israeli confiscation of Palestinian homes and over Israeli
leaders’ provocations in the al Aqsa complex: one of Islam’s holiest sites,
which some Israeli extremists want to tear down to build a Jewish temple.
More recently, the
steady escalation of Israeli land grabs and military-backed settler attacks on
Palestinians in the West Bank created an angry, mobilized public that the
United States—and the Israel-backed Palestinian Authority—seemed unable and
unwilling to address. Highly public U.S. moves to broker an Israeli-Saudi
normalization deal may also have appeared like a closing window of opportunity
for Hamas to act decisively before regional conditions turned inexorably
against it. And, perhaps, the Israeli uprising against Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu’s judicial reforms led Hamas to anticipate a divided and distracted
adversary.
The extent to which
Iran motivated the timing or nature of the surprise attack is still unclear.
Indeed, Iran has recently increased its support to Hamas and sought to
coordinate activities across its “axis of resistance” of Shiite militias and
other actors opposed to the U.S.- and Israeli-backed regional order. But I was
ignoring the broader, local political context within which Hamas made its move
would be an enormous mistake.
Tipping Point
Israel initially responded
to the Hamas attack with an even more intense bombing campaign than usual and
an even more intense blockade, cutting off food, water, and energy. Israel
mobilized its military reserves, bringing 300,000 troops to the border and
preparing for an imminent ground campaign. And Israel has called on Gaza’s
civilians to leave the north within 24 hours. This is an impossible demand.
Gazans have nowhere to go. Highways are destroyed, infrastructure is in rubble,
there is little remaining electricity or power, and the few hospitals and
relief facilities are all in the northern target zone. Even if Gazans wanted to
leave the strip, the Rafah crossing to Egypt has been bombed—and Egyptian
President Abdel Fattah el-Sisi has shown few signs of
offering a friendly refuge.
Gazans are aware of
these facts. They do not see the call to evacuate as a humanitarian gesture.
They believe that Israel intends to carry out another nakba, or
“catastrophe”: the forced displacement of Palestinians from Israel during the
1948 war. They do not believe—nor should they believe—that they will be allowed
to return to Gaza after the fighting. This is why the Biden administration’s
push for a humanitarian corridor allowing Gazan civilians to flee the fighting
is a uniquely bad idea. To the extent that a humanitarian corridor accomplishes
anything, it would be to accelerate the depopulation of Gaza and create a new
wave of permanent refugees. It would also, fairly clearly, offer the right-wing
extremists in Netanyahu’s government a clear road map for doing the same in
Jerusalem and the West Bank.
This Israeli response
to the Hamas attack comes from public outrage and has thus far generated
political plaudits from leaders at home and worldwide. But there is little
evidence that these politicians have seriously considered the potential
implications of a war in Gaza, the West Bank, or the broader region. Once the
fighting begins, there is no sign of serious grappling with an endgame in Gaza.
Is there any sign of thinking about the moral and legal implications of the
collective punishment of Gazan civilians and the inevitable human devastation
to come?
The invasion of Gaza
itself will be laced with uncertainties. Hamas surely anticipated such an
Israeli response and is well prepared to fight a long-term urban insurgency
against advancing Israeli forces. It likely hopes to inflict significant
casualties against a military that has not engaged in such combat in many
years. (Israel’s recent military experiences are limited to profoundly
one-sided operations, such as this July’s attack on the Jenin refugee camp in
the West Bank.) Hamas has already signaled gruesome plans to use its hostages
as a deterrent against Israeli actions. Israel could win quickly, but it seems
unlikely; moves that might accelerate the country’s campaign, such as bombing
cities to the ground and depopulating the north, would come with significant
reputational costs. And the longer the war grinds on, the more the world will
be bombarded with images of dead and injured Israelis and Palestinians, and the
more opportunities there will be for unexpected disruptive events.
Even if Israel
succeeds in toppling Hamas, it will face the challenge of governing the
territory it abandoned in 2005 and then mercilessly blockaded and bombed in the
intervening years. Gaza’s young population will not welcome the IDF as
liberators. There will be no flowers and candy on offer. Israel’s best-case
scenario is a protracted counterinsurgency in a uniquely hostile environment
with a history of failure in which people have nothing to lose.
In a worst-case
scenario, the conflict will not remain confined to Gaza. And unfortunately,
such an expansion is likely. A protracted invasion of Gaza will generate
tremendous pressures in the West Bank, which President Mahmoud Abbas’s
Palestinian Authority will have little ability—or, perhaps, intention—to
contain. Over the last year, Israel’s relentless encroachment on West Bank land
and the violent provocations of the settlers have already brought Palestinian
anger and frustration to a boil. The Gaza invasion could push West Bank
Palestinians over the edge.
Despite overwhelming
Israeli anger at Netanyahu for his government’s nearly unprecedented strategic
failure, opposition leader Benny Gantz has helped solve Netanyahu's major
political problems at no evident cost by joining a national unity war cabinet
without the removal of the right-wing extremists Itamar Ben-Gvir and Bezalel
Smotrich. This decision is significant because it suggests that the
provocations in the West Bank and Jerusalem, which Ben-Gvir and Smotrich
spearheaded last year, will continue in this unsettled environment. It could
accelerate as the settler movement seeks to take advantage of the moment to
attempt to annex some or all of the West Bank and displace its Palestinian
residents. Nothing could be more dangerous.
Serious conflict in
the West Bank—whether in the form of a new intifada or an Israeli settler land
grab—alongside the devastation of Gaza would have massive repercussions. It
would bare the grim truth of Israel’s one-state
reality to a point
where even the last diehards could not deny it. The conflict could trigger
another Palestinian forced exodus, a new wave of refugees cast into already
dangerously overburdened Jordan and Lebanon, or forcibly contained by Egypt in
enclaves in the Sinai Peninsula.
Beyond The Pale
Arab leaders are
realists, preoccupied with their survival and national interests. Nobody
expects them to sacrifice for Palestine, an assumption that has driven American
and Israeli policy under both former U.S. President Donald Trump and U.S.
President Joe Biden. But there are limits to their ability to stand up to a
furiously mobilized mass public, particularly concerning Palestine. Saudi
Arabia might very well normalize relations with Israel, that curious obsession
of the Biden administration, when there are few political costs. It is less likely
to do so when the Arab public is bombarded with gruesome images from Palestine.
In years past, Arab
leaders routinely allowed anti-Israel protests as a way to let off steam,
diverting widespread anger toward an external enemy to avoid criticism of their
dismal records. They will likely do so again, leading cynics to wave off mass
marches and angry op-eds. But the Arab uprisings in 2011 proved how easily and
quickly protests can spiral from something local and contained into a regional
wave capable of toppling long-ruling autocratic regimes. Arab leaders will not
need to be reminded that letting citizens take to the streets in massive
numbers threatens their power. They will not want to be seen taking Israel’s
side.
In this climate,
their reluctance to cozy up to Israel is not simply a question of regime
survival. Arab regimes pursue their interests across multiple playing fields,
regionally, globally, and at home. Ambitious leaders seeking to expand their
influence and claim leadership of the Arab world can read the prevailing winds.
The last few years have already revealed the extent to which regional powers
such as Saudi Arabia and Turkey have been willing to defy the United States on
its most critical issues: hedging Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, keeping oil
prices high, and building stronger relations with China. These decisions
suggest that Washington should not take their continued loyalties for granted,
mainly if U.S. officials unequivocally support extreme Israeli actions in
Palestine.
Arab distancing is
far from the only regional shift the United States risks if it continues down
this path. And it is far from the most frightening: Hezbollah could also
quickly be drawn into the war. Thus far, the organization has carefully
calibrated its response to avoid provocation. But the invasion of Gaza may be a
redline that would force Hezbollah to act. Escalation in the West Bank and
Jerusalem almost certainly would be. The United States and Israel have sought
to deter Hezbollah from entering the fight, but such threats will only go so
far if the IDF continuously escalates. Should Hezbollah enter the fray with its
formidable arsenal of missiles, Israel would face its first two-front war in
half a century. Such a situation would be wrong, not just for Israel. It is
unclear whether Lebanon, already laid low by last year’s port explosion and
economic meltdown, could survive another Israeli retaliatory bombing campaign.
Some U.S. and Israeli
politicians and pundits seem to welcome a wider war. They have, in particular,
been advocating for an attack on Iran. Although most of those advocating for
bombing Iran have taken that position for years, allegations of an Iranian role
in the Hamas attack could widen the coalition of those willing to start a
conflict with Tehran.
But expanding the war
to Iran would pose enormous risks, not only in the form of Iranian retaliation
against Israel but also in attacks against oil shipping in the Gulf and
potential escalation across Iraq, Yemen, and other fronts where Iranian allies
hold sway. Thus far, recognizing those risks has restrained even the most
enthusiastic Iran hawks, as when Trump opted against retaliation for the attack
on Saudi Arabia’s Abqaiq refineries in 2019. Even today, a steady stream of
leaks from U.S. and Israeli officials downplaying Iran’s role suggests an
interest in avoiding escalation. But despite those efforts, the dynamics of
protracted war are deeply unpredictable. The world has rarely been closer to
disaster.
Crimes Are Crimes
Those urging Israel
to invade Gaza with maximalist goals are pushing their ally into a strategic
and political catastrophe. The potential costs are extraordinarily high,
whether counted in Israeli and Palestinian deaths, the likelihood of a
protracted quagmire, or mass displacement of Palestinians. The risk of the
conflict spreading is also alarmingly significant, particularly in the West
Bank and Lebanon, but potentially far wider. And the potential gains—beyond
satisfying demands for revenge—are meager. Not since the American invasion of
Iraq has there been such clarity about the fiasco to come.
Nor have the moral
issues been so straightforward. There is no question that Hamas committed grave
war crimes in its brutal attacks on Israeli citizens, and it should be held
accountable. But there is also no question that the collective punishment of
Gaza, through blockades and bombing and the forced displacement of its
population, represents grave war crimes. There should also be
accountability—or, better yet, respect for international law.
Although these rules
may not trouble Israeli leaders, they pose a significant strategic challenge to
the United States regarding its other highest priorities. It is difficult to
reconcile the United States’ promotion of international norms and the laws of war
in defense of Ukraine from Russia’s brutal invasion with its cavalier disregard
for the same norms in Gaza. The states and peoples of the global South far
beyond the Middle East will notice.
The Biden
administration has clarified that it supports Israel in responding to the Hamas
attack. But now is the time for it to use the strength of that relationship to
stop Israel from creating a remarkable disaster. Washington’s current approach
is encouraging Israel to launch a profoundly misbegotten war, promising protection
from its consequences by deterring others from entering the battle and by
blocking any efforts at imposing accountability through international law. But
the United States does this at the cost of its global standing and its regional
interests. Should Israel’s invasion of Gaza take its most likely course, with
all its carnage and escalation, the Biden administration will come to regret
its choices.
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